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Dudley & Dowell Foundry

Dudley & Dowell Foundry, Cradley Heath. Photograph by Paul Hill.

Early Jewish Presence In Birmingham

‘A House Inhabited by Jews’ (1750). In one Birmingham’s early ‘levy books’, a number of Jews can be seen living together as early as 1750. This is an important piece of evidence. It proves that ...

Edgbaston with Tower of Edgbaston Church

This drawing shows how rural Edgbaston was in the mid-nineteenth century. The tower of Edgbaston Old Church is visible in the background.

Education, Rights and Resistance

Image: Birmingham's Hebrew School (Cornish's Guide to Birmingham and its Manufactories, 1856. Local Studies and Archives) The quest for Jewish rights and education played an important role in the ...

Elizabeth Cadbury (1858-1951)

Entry Submitted by Caroline Forman [Birmingham Archives and Heritage Department] Elizabeth was the wife of George Cadbury, of Cadbury’s Chocolate, Bournville. She was brought up in a period of British ...

Engraving of Singer's Hill Interior

The Midland Illustrated News (1869). After the Severn Street Synagogue would come the famous Singer's Hill Synagogue, opened in 1856. The architect Yeoville Thomson was commissioned for the design. ...

Ephraim Jacobs

Extract from Calthorpe Estate Minutes

In the Minutes of the Calthorpe Estate, we find glimpses of the daily lives of individuals. John Thorneycroft rented Metchley Farm - a considerable parcel of land (267 acres) boundaried by Pritchetts ...

Faces and Places: 156 Oak Tree Lane

Submitted By Birmingham Stories. What link did 156 Oak Tree Lane in Bournville once have with Poland in the 1960's? View the entry to find out more....

Faiths, Journeys, Jewels: Jacob Jacobs and Birmingham

[Submitted by Dr Andy Green] Introduction: Rediscovering the Past From a sign on a wall, it is sometimes possible to uncover a whole history. Buildings that we walk past every day can often hold ...

Farm labourers at Booths Farm, Perry Barr by Sir Benjamin Stone

Parts of Birmingham were very rural until relatively recently and many children were employed in agricultural work.

Female American Serenaders

This advertisement for the Female American Serenaders from 1847 represents a form of performance that was popular in Victorian England during the nineteenth century- blackface minstrelsy. The performance ...

Fighting Prejudice

In the twentieth century, the 'Birmingham Hebrew Congregation' of Singer's Hill faced a humanitarian crisis- the rise of Hitler and the Nazi party in Germany. In WWII, Hitler's brutal regime would ...

Floor tiles from 'Longworth', Edgbaston

These floor tiles, from 24 Priory Road, were rescued from the home of John Thackray Bunce, editor of the Birmingham Daily Post from 1862 to 1898. His daughters Kate and Myra were students at the Birmingham ...

'Going to bed', by Joscelyne Gaskin

Joscelyne Gaskin (1903-1993) was the daughter of the Birmingham artists and designers Arthur Joseph Gaskin and Georgie Evelyn Cave France. Her parents both worked in a variety of media, with Georgie initially ...

'Grace before Meat', by David Wilkie

Oil painting by David Wilkie (1785-1841). ‘Grace before Meat‘ shows three generations of a family saying a prayer before sharing a meal together. In paintings like this, Wilkie presented an intimate ...

Great Colmore Street, Lee Bank

New council flats being built on slum clearance land off Great Colmore Street in the Lee Bank Redevelopment Area.

Great Western Arcade

Image of the Great Western Arcade today.